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I will trade you nudes in exchange for 3 bars of gold pressed latinum
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2019-11-30 at 8:33 PM UTCAny takers?
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2019-11-30 at 8:44 PM UTCWhat nudes you got? Any rares? Neve Campbell?
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2019-11-30 at 8:47 PM UTC
Originally posted by mmQ What nudes you got? Any rares? Neve Campbell?
NAKED mango
NAKED pomegranate
NAKED orange banana
And many more!
Call now to receive a sample of NAKED blueberry absolutely free! Shipping and handling not included, order valid only while supplies last.
Why get nude when you can get NAKED? -
2019-11-30 at 8:56 PM UTCOk so that's a no on the Neve Campbell?
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2019-11-30 at 9:03 PM UTCIf I call now will you double my offer?
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2019-11-30 at 9:04 PM UTCBig mangos, smol mangos, what are we talking here.
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2019-11-30 at 9:08 PM UTC
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2019-11-30 at 9:11 PM UTC
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2019-11-30 at 9:12 PM UTCI would do anything for §m£ÂgØLs butthole, next to dave rubins.
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2019-11-30 at 9:13 PM UTCI can into smol mongols.
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2019-11-30 at 10:11 PM UTCI accidentally the whole NAKED mongol
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2019-11-30 at 10:24 PM UTCI'll give you 500 to let me use your orfices for a night
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2019-11-30 at 10:29 PM UTCWell TIL
In the Star Trek universe, why can't latinum be replicated?
https://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/5337/why-can-latinum-not-be-replicated
According to the folks on Stack Exchange there are 2 possible reasons why Latinum can’t be replicated, both having to do with it’s (supposed) place in the periodic table. My favorite is that Latinum is a superheavy element in the “island of stability” out past the end of our periodic table. This would explain why it is only found in the nebula of supernovas, as no other event expends enough energy to create detectable amounts of the stuff. Replicators only handle “normal” matter and lack the energy to create Latinum.
The other possibility is that Latinum is highly radioactive and (like all the transuranics) is unstable when created by nuclear bombardment in the replicator. (This fact also explains the difficulty of obtaining nuclear weapons in the ST universe) Latinum is always contained in Gold because when Latinum decays (into Unobtanium) it releases high energy Gammas which drives the Au 197 to Au 198, which then decays releasing beta particles which are captured by the Unobtanium, changing it to Latnium, thus creating a stable supply of Latinum on a reasonable time scale. The Mercury created by the beta decay of Gold is a trivial waste product in this reaction.
As a free bonus, I will tell you that Dilithium crystals cannot be replicated due to their property of producing strong repulsive eddy currents when subjected to high frequency energy like that found in a replicator, thus as soon as the dilithium structure begins to form it rejects the energy fields attempting to create it. -
2019-11-30 at 10:44 PM UTC
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2019-11-30 at 10:57 PM UTC
Originally posted by Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country Well TIL
https://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/5337/why-can-latinum-not-be-replicated
This is why Star Trek is actual science fiction. The science in star trek is pretty interesting. It's not JUST made up terms. They base it off real things too. I looked this up a week or two ago when I started watching DS9 and thought it was cool.
2063, mark my words. Cochrane will invent the warp drive. -
2019-12-01 at 2:12 AM UTC
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2019-12-01 at 2:22 AM UTCI'll trade you 3 bars of anything if you kill yourself
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2019-12-01 at 2:25 AM UTC